HAMILTON, ON, October 31, 2018 /24-7PressRelease/ -- A simple bar of soap is making a big difference in the lives of people in impoverished communities across Asia. Distributed by GFA-supported workers (www.gfa.ca), it is the centrepiece of a hygiene awareness drive that improves the health and welfare of many living on the margins.
While the cleanliness campaign goes on year-round through its varied ministry-supported programs, the organization brings an additional emphasis to it to mark Global Handwashing Day (Oct. 15). The annual event, whose 2018 theme is "Clean Hands—A Recipe for Health," aims to increase awareness about the importance of handwashing with soap as an effective and affordable way of preventing sickness.
To mark the day, GFA-supported teams across Asia will be holding special handwashing presentations at some of the Bridge of Hope centres they run, and also in local schools and village meeting places.
The events include a special video offering an explanation of how disease can be spread by handling food with dirty hands, and a demonstration of effective handwashing. Participants are given an opportunity to practice the proper technique, and also receive a free bar of soap to take home with them.
Basic hygiene steps like these can reduce sickness, which means families have to spend less of their limited income on medicines, and also lose less work time. According to organizers of Global Handwashing Day, up to 70 percent of cases of diarrhea may be associated with poor food hygiene.
The handwashing lessons are just part of GFA-supported broader healthcare work, which also includes free medical checkups, distribution of water filters, and drilling fresh water wells. These initiatives are in turn part of GFA's efforts to share God's love through practical care.
"Frequent sickness only makes the lives of the poor that much harder," said Dr. Daniel Johnson, leader of the GFA-supported medical ministry. "Yet it is possible to make significant improvements in health by taking some basic hygiene precautions. By sharing these lessons, we want to show people that God loves them and cares for their well-being."
One GFA-supported presenter told a handwashing class, "To protect from sickness, we need to wash our hands before and after doing any work. Our hands are our future."
A 13-year-old girl who participated in one of the presentations said later that she intended to use the little money she had to buy more soap for all her family to use.
The presentation even impacted a teacher at one of the schools visited by a GFA-supported team. "Many times, I ate food without washing my hands," she said. "But I have learned today that if I wash hands properly before and after food or work I will be healthy. Thank you so much for bringing this awareness among us."
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Clean hands go a long way toward ensuring good personal and public health. GFA-supported workers celebrate Global Handwashing Day by conducting hygiene-awareness and training workshops at its Bridge of Hope centres around Asia.
GFA World ( www.gfa.ca and its worldwide affiliates have—for almost 40 years—provided humanitarian assistance and spiritual hope to millions, especially among those who have yet to hear the Good News. Last year, this included more than 70,000 children, free medical services in over 1,200 villages and remote communities, 4,000 wells drilled, 11,000 water filters installed, Christmas presents for more than 200,000 needy families, and spiritual teaching available in 110 languages in 14 nations through radio ministry.
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